• shalafi@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Credit scores actually help minorities.

    The system didn’t really kick off in the US until 1989, which I’d guess is more recent than most realize. Until then, you had a sit-down with the bank officer and explained your need. How well do you think THAT went over for black people?

    When you apply for credit, the creditor has no clue about race. (Your name can be an indicator. LOL, ask this white boy about getting trashed resumes until I dropped my “black” middle name. 🙄) You’re an anonymous number, all they care about. How in the world could you conflate that with racism?

    So, if anything, credit scores clearly work against racism. You could argue that they hurt poor people, and you would be somewhat correct. But lenders aren’t exactly clamoring to loan money to the destitute. In a perfect world, your credit score reflects your ability to repay the loan.

    • Discoslugs@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Im glad you have found success with your credit score experiance.

      On the other hand, Heres a paper reflecting on a few studies showing how credit scores can poorly affect minority communities.

      https://www.thehousingcenter.org/credit-inequality-undermines-access-to-fair-housing-and-opportunity/

      In Cuyahoga County, there are significant disparities in credit health across neighborhoods. Communities of color have the lowest median credit scores, the highest percentage of individuals with subprime credit scores, and the highest share of individuals having debt in collections. On the other hand, majority white communities have the highest median credit scores, lowest percentage of individuals with subprime credit scores, and lowest share of individuals having debt in collections. These disparities are reflected in access to mortgages, mortgage denial rates, and arguably shape access to rental housing. Relying on credit scores and credit histories to determine access to rental housing and mortgages disparately impacts communities of color and helps exacerbate existing inequalities in the region.

      And further

      In practice, the reliance upon credit scores in evaluating borrowers and tenants disproportionately disadvantages communities of color, perpetuating another cycle of economic and housing injustice.

    • explodicle@local106.com
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      1 year ago

      Credit scores are an improvement over white bankers deciding who gets loans. But they’re not an improvement over black-owned banks deciding who gets loans. The whites bombed Black Wall Street and then added a less bad (but still bad) alternative.

      • EhList@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Your grasp of history is odd. There are 60-70 years between the events you list here.

        • explodicle@local106.com
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          1 year ago

          Of course it’s odd. Most people don’t see those “two steps back” (white bankers) as connected to the “one step forward” (credit scores from white bankers) because of this gap.

          • EhList@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            No it’s odd because of the time period between them.

            The fact you think it is “white bankers” who created credit scores rather than algorithms created by mathematicians, finance experts, and economists speaks volumes as to how poorly educated you are on this topic.

            • explodicle@local106.com
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              1 year ago

              My grasp of history is odd because these two events were decades apart? Why do you think this duration is important?

              I haven’t stated (and it doesn’t matter) who originally created credit scores. The authority figures to whom you’re appealing have also criticized credit scores for their racism. So I think it would be more constructive if we discussed the subject matter, rather than each other.

              • EhList@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                You are connecting two events that are unrelated and attempting to create a connection and that is an odd thing to do in history. The massacre in Tulsa has no direct impact on the creation of credit scores and it requires a massive amount of illogic to get there.

                As for your attempts to find a logical flaw just stop now. You clearly do not understand what they are if you think I made an appeal to authority (I did not and could not since there was no source).

                You however seem to think that a wikipedia article existing means the notions suggested are factual and that cannot be farther from the truth. Just because someone criticized credit scores does not make their claims valid or even informed.